n -04 A Full Day's Studying A day in the life of the Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit. DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff Writer I attend morning minyan (prayer quorum). But at JAMD, it's a matter of choice. The school offers at least two concurrent services each day. Today, Guyer, whose family belongs to the Conservative Adat Shalom Synagogue, chooses the so-called "egalitarian" minyan, in which female stu- dents take turns leading the service. Some, like 10th- grader Danniell Nadiv of Huntington Woods, also - choose to wear tefillin and tallitot (prayer shawls). Leading today's egalitarian minyan are ninth-grad- er Ilyssa Tackel and 10th-grader Josh Cohen, both of West Bloomfield. The chanting — all in the original Hebrew and Aramaic — is hushed and rapid, alter- is 7:30 a.m. Monday, the first day back to school after spring break, and Jonathan Guyer of Huntington Woods is considering the characteristics of triangles. Guyer, a junior at the Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit, has attended the multi-stream Jewish high school since it opened with 53 freshmen and sophorhores in August 2000. Today, he's agreed to let the Jewish News tag along. Like nearly two-thirds of the JAMD students, Guyer came straight to th'e school from Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit, so he's always had to deal with a curriculum that combines Jewish and secular studies. But studying Hebrew and religion 40 percent of each day hasn't cut into his mastery of other subjects. Starting with his honors pre-calculus class, his schedule at JAMD includes two advanced-placement classes as well as advanced Biology and third-year Spanish. On the Jewish studies side, he also takes the school's highest level of Hebrew and both Bible and Rabbinics (sacred writings and philosophy). Despite a schedule of advanced classes, he finds time to play guitar, edit the school paper and spend eight hours a week after school learning life-saving skills to prepare for a summer as life- guard at Camp Tamakwa in Huntsville, Ontario. With calculator in hand, he watches as teacher Michael Weiss rapidly draws a 70-degree angle and plugs in the lengths of the two sides. A Ph.D. candidate in mathematics at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Weiss has been on the JAMD faculty since the high school's first year. He teaches both Bible and math. His first-period pre-calculus class has 16 stu- dents, about average for the 112-student school. "There's definitely things you miss in a small school," Guyer says, "but, at the same time, the teachers are great and you get their full atten- tion." Compared to his first year at JAMD, the school is huge, he says. "But I just got a letter from Rabbi Buckman [JAMD head of school] saying he read my As his Hebrew teacher explains requirements for the final English paper and he liked this point and that paper, junior Jonathan Guyer takes notes — in Hebrew. point," Guyer says. "What other principal would do something like that?" ;:"•,•:` k • A Time For Prayer It's 8:20 a.m., time to lay aside graphing calculators and empirical proofs to lay tefillin. In Conservative and Orthodox congregations, men strap the small leather boxes containing parch- ment scrolls to their arm and forehead when they 5/ 9 2003 90 nating with silent davening. A few students in the back of the room don't par- ticipate, but Guyer takes a place near the front. Guyer frequently attends the more traditional mechitzah minyan, in which women sit separately. "In the mechitzah minyan, only men lead the services and read Torah," he explains. "There is a lit- tle more singing here. Plus, in the other one, the pace is faster." On Tuesdays and Fridays, the school holds a dis- cussion minyan, and there's also an occasional learn- ers' minyan, especially helpful for those who came to the JAMD from public school. In addition, students lead a weekly minyan at the Fleischman Residence, a home for senior citizens located a few yards from the school on the Eugene and Marcia Applebaum Jewish Community Campus in West Bloomfield. On An Advanced Track After minyan, classes follow in rapid succession until the 3:30 p.m. dismissal. The school uses a modified block schedule, in which students attend single periods of every class on some days, while other days are devoted to larger blocks of fewer classes. On Mondays, stu- dents have a single period for each class, and Guyer's next class is Hebrew. This is Modern Hebrew 6, the most advanced the school has offered so far. Because so many in the class are juniors, there will be a seventh-level Hebrew class during the 2003-2004 school year. Teacher Cobi Sacerdoti, who earned her Ph.D. in Hebrew language and literature from U-M, speaks only Hebrew in class. Everybody in sixth- level Hebrew went to a local day school — Hillel, Yeshivat Akiva, Yeshiva Beth Yehudah or Beth Jacob School for Girls — or was brought up in Israel, Guyer says. Along with the majority of its students, the Jewish Academy imported some of its teachers from Hillel. Among them is Carim Calkins, who came to the school after a detour as assistant prin- cipal at South Lyon High School. For Guyer's class, Advanced Topics in Biology, Calkins has prepared a two-column chart outlin- ing the differences between meiosis and mitosis,- two forms of cell division. It's a lively class, with digressions into related fields of poison ivy, insect bites and sexually transmitted diseases. A quick visit to his locker and Guyer is ready for his next class, Advanced-Placement American History. "U.S. History is probably my favorite class," he says. "We discuss things in depth — really in depth. Like comparing the elections in the 1800s to elections today or the situation with the United States in Iraq to the Philippines. "You can do that with only 12 in the class. And Mr. Gutman is an outstanding teacher." Jerry Gutman, who has 40 years experience in public education, remembers teaching Guyer's older sisters at the Center of Advanced Studies and the Arts, which brought together students from five Oakland County public school districts. Today's discussion focuses on the 1960s — the